I read in IEEE
Spectrum July 2007, a detailed technical analysis of how a high profile mobile
phone bugging that happened in 2004. It was of Greece Prime Minister, his cabinet
colleagues in defense and foreign affairs, MPs and others. The interesting thing the
authors (Vassilis Prevelakis, Diomidis
Spinellis) point out was the fact the whole episode was undetected for several
months. The hackers (till date even after a Greece Parliament Commission was not identified)
had used very sophisticated techniques to hide traces of their activities and ensured
they left no entries in any logs.
The cellphones of Greece
PM and others were wiretapped to unauthorized numbers by hacking into Ericsson's
AXE Switches used in Vodafone Greece mobile network and installing
RootKit softwares. Ericsson switch software has the ability to patch its Operating
System code without rebooting by using something called has Correction Area. The hackers
installed about 29 blocks of code in this correction area, tampered all checksums
to go undetected, modified (made itself hidden) the list of active processes in memory.
The rogue software stored all the mobile numbers that has to be tapped in memory (there
by avoiding any disk entries) and copied the voice calls to parallel numbers.
From a software best practice angle, what was interesting was this could have been
identified much earlier if Vodafone had purchased a front-end (GUI) software called
IMS (Interception Management System) that maintains a list of legal wiretapping numbers.
This list could have been compared periodically with what was in memory and any differences
between the two alerted immediately. In this case, the backend OS in the switch had
legal wiretapping capabilities enabled and working, but the front-end to manage it
was not purchased by customer. Clear case of not reducing the attack surface area
by removing unwanted piece of software in live environments.
Read the complete post at http://www.venkatarangan.com/blog/2007/09/19/Greece+PM+Mobile+Bugged.aspx